
Compassion and
Generation Next
An introduction to the Interfaith Youth
Core; a group
of international, religiously diverse young people sharing a common interest in
integrating faith, diversity and social action.
Article appeared in the
by Martin E. Marty
It cannot be lost on us academi
Of course, they are busy; good campuses really put them to work. But so are the
middle-aged and senior people who show up. And one would think that the young,
who have so many more years to produce effects and absorb shocks, would be more
motivated than are those who have fewer years ahead of them. Are they mired in
apathy or cynicism, too distracted or paralyzed to gather with older people to
contribute and receive ideas about relating to surrounding society?
One area where I particularly notice the senior character of town-and-gown
audiences is in the arena where inter-religious affairs are discussed and
projects planned. It would be hard to get a quorum in a phone booth for a
standard brand discussion of Christian ecumenism among the young, and
Christian-Jewish-Muslim-Hindu-Buddhist dialogue does not ordinarily do better
-- again, barring the presence of celebrities, e.g., the Dalai Lama or the
Pope.
Now it happens that there are new stirrings. Today I have time to point to one
that has in the winter past come into the range of the Sightings periscope.
It's not our place to do endorsing or movement-blurbing.
The risks for that are high, and our credentials and resources for sorting them
out are meager. Still, I cannot help being cheered by this one: Interfaith
Youth Core (IFYC), "Nurturing a New Generation of Compassionate Global
Leaders." Compassionate, yes. And passionate, too.
Executive Director Dr. Eboo Patel offers more stories
and ideas, and word of experiences and experiment, than one can absorb in an
hour. Let him tell his own story: www.ifyc.org or
e-mail infor@ifyc.org. I get regular
invitations to the IFYC events, but don't live the kind of schedule that allows
me to check in, so I view from a distance and read.
IFYC began in June of 1998 as "a group of religiously diverse young people
from around the world who found a common interest in integrating faith,
diversity and social action." (A
If you start seeing more young people among the silver-haired constituencies in
many serious audiences, perhaps the IFYC got them there.
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Sightings comes from the Martin Marty Center at the
University of Chicago Divinity School.
http://marty-center.uchicago.edu/sightings/